Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
Regnpojken
Det är ju bara en gammal film
Vi kan göra en tråd så får folk kolla med riktig expertis på vem som har rätt.
Jag vet att jag har rätt för detta har diskuteras otaliga gånger.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Chernobyl_and_other_radioactivity_re leases
Här har du vad vi diskuterat svart på vit
Jag hade rätt.
Betänk nu att Chernobyl bara brann i 10 dagar men det motsvarade ändå 400 hiroshima bomber.
Chernobyl härdsmälta kan pågå i hundratals om inte tusentals år till skillnad från en vätebomb.
Medical Planning and Response Manual for a Nuclear Detonation Incident:
A Practical Guide
https://www.phe.gov/Preparedness/planning/nuclearresponsemanual/Documents/medplanresmannucdet-guide-final.pdf
In the first hour, fallout dose rates in the hundreds of R/hour should be expected, and may be 1000 R/hour (10 Gy/h) or higher in localized areas.
UNITS: R/hr is technically Roentgen’s per hour but is often used interchangeably with rad/hour or rem/hour [rem is used for radiation protection as it accounts for the type of radiation, eg., neutrons, x-rays or particle}. Gy, or Gray is the preferred international unit [and Sievert is the unit for radiation protection]. Therefore, 100 rad = 1 Gy, and 100 rem = 1 Sv.
At whole-body doses over 2 Sv , more serious acute medical conditions occur from hours to days after exposure, including damage to specific systems of the body such as the blood-forming tissues, the brain, and the gastro-intestinal and cardiovascular systems
The “7-10 rule” indicates that fallout decays to approximately 10% after 7 hours and every 7 times that it decays to 10% (so it would be 1% at 49 hours (7 hours x7= 49 hours or ~2 days) and 0.1% at 2 weeks (2 days x 7= 14 days) )
Tror du på vad jag säger om du får det från US Gov självt?